Sneak peek at Italian restaurant opening in Harrogate

A new Italian restaurant is opening in Harrogate tomorrow to serve up fresh pasta and speciality wines.

Pranzo Italian, at 31-33 Cold Bath Road, is the second restaurant from chef Marco Greco. He opened his first in Ilkley two and a half years ago.

Marco cooking up a mafalde with four-hour braised beef shin ragu.

This new Harrogate restaurant will be open every day from 12pm to 10pm except on Sundays when it will close at 6pm.

Although it has meat, fish and vegetarian options, Pranzo Harrogate does not have a large menu. It believes in serving a few dishes it can perfect.


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As the restaurant has a large kitchen space downstairs, the chefs will be able to make fresh pasta each and every day.

Marco Greco, on the eve of Pranzo Harrogate’s opening, told the Stray Ferret:

“I have been looking for a new place for about a year. I know it is not the best time to open a new business, it was a bit crazy. But we are already fully booked for the opening night so it is looking good and I think it will be worth it.”

Pranzo Harrogate is the new Italian restaurant on Cold Bath Road.

Pranzo Ilkley is rated as the number two restaurant in the town on TripAdvisor.

Mr Greco has Italian heritage, learned to cook with his grandmother and followed in the footsteps of his dad who also opened an Italian restaurant.

He worked in his dad’s restaurant as soon as he left school and always dreamed of opening his own place.

Pranzo Harrogate has space for 30 people inside the restaurant and a further 20 outside under current covid restrictions.

It has employed 10 staff and intends to recruit more in the future.

Harrogate and Knaresborough pedestrianisation extended

North Yorkshire County Council is extending temporary pedestrianisation measures in Harrogate and Knaresborough until next year.

Parking suspensions and road closures have become a familiar sight and the council confirmed today they will remain until at least January 31.

To improve the look of the scheme, traffic cones on Albert Street and James Street in Harrogate will make way for planters.

The planters will be funded by Harrogate Borough Council through the government’s £50m reopening high streets safely fund.

The two councils hope the move will reassure the public it is safe to shop in the towns.


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However, some business owners on James Street have warned of empty shops to come if the county council persisted with pedestrianisation.

The county council said in response it had listened to those views and will keep the measures under review.

Cllr Don Mackenzie, the executive member for access at the county council, said:

“We are committed to supporting the county’s recovery while ensuring people can visit shops safely and buy local. We hope that these measures are making shoppers feel confident to visit our high streets as we approach the Christmas shopping period.”

Cllr Phil Ireland, Harrogate Borough Council’s cabinet member for carbon reduction and sustainability, said:

“Feedback from both businesses and visitors alike has been positive and I’m glad these measures have encouraged people back to the high street that it so desperately needs.”

Parking spaces between Princes Square and West Park on the A61 in Harrogate will be reopened, it was also announced.

The full list of measures in Harrogate:

The full list of measures in Knaresborough:

Hugh Dennis visits Masham for Channel 4 programme

The comedian Hugh Dennis is filming in Masham this week for a Channel 4 programme that aims to uncover more about the town’s ‘lost cemetery’.

Mr Dennis is expected to be in the North Yorkshire town for another couple of days filming for The Great British Dig: History in Your Back Garden.

It follows numerous discoveries of Anglo-Scandinavian skeletons dating back to between 679 and 1011 AD around the centre of the market town.

Building works in 1988 and 1999 uncovered the remains of 58 skeletons.

Many locals believe there is much more to discover.


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Neil McIntosh, who works in tourist information for Visit Masham, told the Stray Ferret:

“This is fertile ground for excavations. So far we have only found just over 50 skeletons but if the cemetery was in use for more than 300 years there will be plenty more to find.”

Mr McIntosh says the crew for the programme is digging up the garden of a former butcher.

He added that the show could find some animal bones as well as human remains from hundreds of years ago.

Why is Harrogate the ‘best place to work from home’?

Harrogate was named as the best place to work from home in a survey published yesterday.

Fast broadband, green space and low crime rates were among the factors that earned the town top spot — but who knows better than the people who live here? So we headed to the Stray to ask Harrogate residents if they agreed with the finding.

Covid has forced many people to work from home and a fifth of people said they wanted to do it more often when the pandemic is over.

Harrogate shops raise money with ‘Giraffle’ for food bank

A group of independent Harrogate shops have joined forces to raise money for the town’s Trussell Trust food bank by organising a “Giraffle” .

Watermark Gallery, on Royal Parade, came up with the idea and worked with children’s illustrator Jane Ray to get it up and running.

Jane created a five-feet tall paper mache giraffe based on the main character of a book called “Zeraffa Girraffa” in 2014.

Just as the character of that book travelled far to her new home in Paris, Zeraffa is travelling around the Harrogate district in October and November.



So far she has been seen in the windows of Catherine Smith Vintage, Bespoke Eyewear and Westmorland Sheepskins.

The next stop will be the Little Ripon Bookshop. When her tour comes to an end, Zeraffa will be raffled off to one lucky winner. The tickets will be drawn on December 18.

Tickets to enter the raffle are £5 and are available from Watermark Gallery. A total of 100 tickets have been sold so far and another 100 are on sale.

Liz Hawkes, owner of the Watermark Gallery, hopes that the “Giraffle” will raise £1,000 for charity. She said:

“Zeraffa was a real talking point in the window of our gallery, and we had countless enquiries about buying her. I think people saw her as a ray of sunshine during a somewhat challenging time.

“This gave us the idea of creating an ongoing artwork initiative to unite local independent retailers as well as raising money for a great local cause.”

Cannabis driver disqualified after skidding into skid risk sign

A drug driver who skidded into a skid risk road sign has been handed a year-long driving ban.

Harry Franklin Waudby, 20, of Wetherby, lost control of his car and crashed in front of a police vehicle in Tockwith in June.

The officers just happened to be passing when they saw the crash and stopped to help.


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Nobody was seriously hurt in the incident but Waudby tested positive for cannabis.

At a hearing at Harrogate Magistrates’ Court, he pleaded guilty to drug driving .

As well as the 12 month driving disqualification, the magistrates fined Waudby £233 and told him to pay £85 in court costs.

Speaking after the sentencing, traffic constable Michael Rowan said:

“As traffic officers we frequently deal with drug drivers and it’s an incredibly selfish and dangerous offence. Anyone who does it is a hazard to themselves as well as innocent road users, and we endeavour to catch as many as possible.”

Harrogate’s permanent coronavirus testing site opens

Harrogate’s first permanent coronavirus testing site is due to open today just over a week after builders moved in.

The Department of Health and Social Care centre is in the Dragon Road car park, which has been home to the mobile testing centre over the past few months. It will test up to 320 people a day.

It has been replaced with a series of modular buildings with floodlights all linked up to a generator to keep it accessible as the nights turn darker.


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After an initial pilot period, it will be open between 8am and 8pm, seven days a week.

That is far more than the previous mobile testing centre. That had generally been open for four hours a day, two days a week.

People will also be able to turn up on foot, unlike at the mobile testing centres. However, tests must still be booked in advance.

Staff making the finishing touches to the testing centre.

Dr Lincoln Sargeant, the director of public health in North Yorkshire, said:

“We have worked hard to retain and increase the level of testing across the county, so we are pleased that our efforts have resulted in the creation of these two sites, which will be up and running shortly.

“We will continue to lobby for further expansion of testing facilities across the county.”

The Stray Ferret asked the DHSC the cost of building the permanent testing centre in Harrogate but had not received a response by the time of publication.

Harrogate Muslims identify new site for district’s first mosque

Harrogate’s Muslim community has identified a new site for the district’s first mosque after its initial location encountered difficulties.

The Harrogate Islamic Association had hoped to convert the former Nidderdale Children’s Resource Centre in Starbeck, as previously reported.

However, complications relating to change of use and parking has led the association to set its sights instead on a former church hall in Harrogate.

This former children’s centre in Starbeck was the first choice for the mosque.

The hall is attached to the Trinity Methodist Church on Park Drive close to the Stray and town centre.

FSS Property is advertising the former church hall as “well maintained” and “fully functional for its current intended use”.


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The 2,000 square foot building is on the market for £575,000, whereas the former children’s centre in Starbeck was expected to cost about £425,000.

Zahed Amanullah, from the HIA, told the Stray Ferret he was hopeful it would have enough funds:

“We have been fortunate in that, even after we finished fundraising for our first mosque, people have been getting in touch to offer money.

“The biggest thing for us was to see that support from the community. We are confident that this new place will not be contentious.”

He added that although the former church hall does not have a garden or kitchen like the site in Starbeck, it has a bigger prayer space.

The Harrogate Islamic Association is growing in popularity.

The HIA, which started in 2011 and now has 100 members, began publicly fundraising for £85,000 in September to achieve the shortfall in funds,

Its appeal currently has almost £102,000.

If all goes to plan Mr Amanullah hopes the group will be able to open the mosque around March to April next year in time for Ramadan.

Harrogate face mask litter a ‘sign of the times’

A Harrogate resident who takes pictures of discarded face masks believes they are a “sad sign of the times”.

Glyn Hambrook, a retired university lecturer, has built up a collection of images over the past couple of weeks.

He doesn’t go out of his way to find them littered on the ground but has still managed to snap 17 on his daily school run.

The official guidance in England is to wear reusable masks when possible. If you use a single use mask you should dispose of it in a black bin bag.


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However, Mr Hambrook has noticed an increasing amount thrown on the floor, leaving them to others to clean up.

He told the Stray Ferret:

“I am by no means an environmental activist but I noticed how, as coronavirus restrictions eased, the truce we had with nature seemed to become lost. To me, these images I have taken are quite poignant. They blend the tragedy of the pandemic with the melancholy of autumn.”

Besides creating a sad sight on the streets, the masks pose risks to wildlife. The RSPCA has encouraged people to “snip the straps” of masks amid concerns about the number of animals caught in litter since lockdown.

Have you noticed face mask litter on your street? Send in your pictures and stories to contact@thestrayferret.co.uk.

Harrogate Turkish Baths: decision on same-sex sessions due next year

Harrogate Borough Council is set to decide next year whether to end same-sex sessions at the town’s Turkish baths.

The council, which runs the baths, told the Stray Ferret today it planned to publish a report based on its recent consultation by early next year.

The council has said a timetable consisting entirely of mixed sessions would reflect “equality and balance”.

It opened an online consultation in July seeking views on the possible axeing of same-sex sessions. The consultation, which ran while the baths were closed, has now finished.


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Harrogate’s Turkish baths remain closed for sessions but have been open since August for treatments only.

A spokesman for the council said it would publish its report on the consultation “in December of possibly January”. A decision will be taken shortly afterwards.

The baths stopped male-only sessions back in 2011 in the wake of reports of “inappropriate behaviour,” only to bring them back five years later.

It is unclear when a new timetable, if implemented, would happen. The government has not indicated when saunas or spa rooms are set to reopen.